2 results match your criteria: "San Francisco School of Medicine 94143-0738[Affiliation]"
World J Urol
December 1998
Department of Urology, University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine 94143-0738, USA.
The problems encountered with ileal and colocystoplasty have led to the use of the stomach for bladder augmentation, termed gastrocystoplasty. The advantages of gastrocystoplasty over intestinal segment augmentation include reduced chloride reabsorption, decreased mucus production, decreased urinary infection in the presence of acid urine, extremely low incidence of stones, and avoidance of complications from short bowel syndrome. The gastric patch provides comparable improvements in bladder volume, pressure, and continence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Urol
July 1995
Department of Urology, University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine 94143-0738, USA.
Neovascularization of tumor tissue (tumor angiogenesis) is considered essential for tumor growth, proliferation and eventually metastasis. Microvessel density or count, a measure of tumor angiogenesis, correlates with clinical outcome in skin, breast, lung and prostate carcinomas. To determine whether an association of tumor angiogenesis and nodal metastasis exists in invasive bladder cancer, microvessel counts in 41 primary invasive stages (T2 to 4,NX,M0) bladder cancers were assessed.
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